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Mt. Vernon Republican (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1854), 1864-11-01

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'1' ' ' . -A- i r i I -a 4) 1. . . vr S A AAA (!U N V &; m ii.lr.li 1 H -( ; - s i I i I S I 3 I ' I 1 . r , I . IKVtXlCl TO POL1TIOH,' LITEUATUHM, JCIJ-TH' ANi GtZTXJ&ltA GENEIt AH, IIVXKIJLICrKNCDE. t ' " MOUNT VERNON, OHIO. TUESDAYof EMBBK& v. N'v rv VOL. X. r III IH. U. I. v 1 N O 52 t W. - rr- ' JIOUJt'T VEIIXON REPUBLICAN. ','" TEB1M Or BBBdCRUTIOW. (tlx moutbi f d ailvapce, ......a... $1 00 On yea: In advance,.,.......,-...... ........ 4 00 If not put! in a-ranc,.... 2 W TEIIMS OK TStANSIKHT ADVKRTISINO. One square nf 10 Hoes, out Insertion, .i.. ...... It 00 (las square earll eubeetiueiit iDiertJoD,.,,.. ...... 60 Onff square t inontli,- . ;'- ; 9 00 Ou sgaaro 6 montlis,....- . 5 00 Oat sqoare 12 mtmths, .' .. 8 00 Tiro squares J mouths,... ...'.....v..-....... t 00 Two Biuret 6 montl',1,...." t 00 Twoiurtil3ii)uthi,. 12 00 AdrorUiemanta orr two KquArei to bo otutrattd for nfi xiAid Accordingly, or ohargad At adrortlidug rate. ; l.KOAI. ADVKKTISKMK.M9, : ICiMt Innai'tioii 10 lin, Each tu0iiutM)t lnJirtioo per aquara,........, . AttocbuMot N'oticci before JuiticeN and proo... $1 00 CO S 00 t 00 Admlultr(tri and Executor! Notion., . BusiooM Cardi, not exceeding 6 lines per Annum. 6 00 Motlcoa in jUoal colamn 10 Uaea or lea, 1 0 Mo adverUrtuieot-taken except tor A ipaclfled time, nd no special notiae published in any cate, nnleaa pAtd for, At the rate of $1 00 for erory tea line, fndepen dent of tbe adrertieement referred .to. Np advertising done for Advertising Agents excopt for ca.h and prompt PV-' .. , , ". . . . AE1ITAL3 4 DEPARTURES 8. M. & N. R. R. ' - KORTH. , ' Kail Aocominmlatlon arrivea......... ii i, ii it vavo( ; .. "OOTH. , MailV.......,.'..l.....l... ....... 2. Acuomuiodatloo. .......... ...9:25 F. a. M0 a. a. .. 730 A. . .10:47 a'. '. ...4:26 r. a. tfy Cara on the- Oontral Obio Road leave Newark fnllowa: . Uoing Last, i ....6:4S A. M - " 4:30 f. u. Going Went, i M a. a. " i ' .... 11:30 r.M. .On the P. C. & 0. ruad going East, the curs leave Jfewark, 8:00 A. a. " Jl:40 A. a. OoiofF Westv being on the Central Boad, Ihev leave An above. . , CHURCH DIRECTORY. DISCIPLF3 CBCBCO, Vine Street, between Oar and McKeniie, " ' FBRSBTTERIAH CnURCn,orner Gay aod Chestnut etroeU.. Kev. I1EKVKY. EETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHUBCn, corner Oar and Chestunt streets. , - Ber. K. H, BUSH. I ROTE9TANT ErldGOPAl. CHUBCH, comer Ga nd HikAtreets, ... Rev UEU, U.JiKKSE. CATQOLIC CHUBCII, corner High and McKeniie, ' . Rev. JULIUS BRENT. jIETHOMST ' PRfeTESTANT eHDRCH, . Mechanics street between Vine and High. , , BAPTIST CHUBCU. Vine streol, between Mnlberr and Mechanics. ' Rev. J. W. ICENBABUEB. COKHREOATI0NAL CHURCH, Molber t.. between - Sugar aud Hamtmmic. . Rev. T. E. MONROE. UNITED FRE3BTrERIAN, corner Main and Sugar" atreets. . Rev. 8. M. HUTCHISON. U ETHODIST WESLEYAN : CHURCH, comer Mul-berrj And ffoestor. Rev. MR.'TRAVIa. '; -...'-'.-'. PROBATE K0TICE.' . : . i NOTICE is hereby given that the following named Executors, AdiiiioUtrators and Guardians have tiled their accounts and-vouohers fov settlement, to-wit: H, Hervey, Executor of Jaiuns Cunningham; John : . '','"' Xeers, Kenutnr ot Hfuiel uerf N l.evrlu and f. ' 'hainbisiix'jcutors of Wra. ltamo: Richard House. Ex- slcutor of Darid House; Isaac Loedy, Administrator of- l.lh 1 .Q,l. !..!. ..... It l.ltnt.f..ln. Ar r v ,.'. Rutnnicll; Ooty Farmer, AdruinistratorofEliusKAiniert v Williau Bebiittt, Adminlstsator of Oio. M llobout; Robert UclOud, Adminiittratnr of John V7, Robenson; John ljams, Administrator or w. 41. Kdgcomb; vm, McUlelland, Admiuistrator el Wra. Walker; Win. Mo i;ieuaa. Aatninlstrator f n. AL- Kamsey; John Ate lUtiro. AdmlniMtr.. ne .Tl.nmi n.uu,.l,. .l.l,n I. . - Rush, Adiuinlstiotor of I'.ewie 8. Carr; E. W. Cotton, Administrator of A. Lab men; Allison Adams, Adminia- . Korneuus I'.n-scll; Klisa H Murnhv, Ailmlnls . tratorof. Georre W. I'.vkMn' HlrhAt,! .nri RliKilhAth Unn. tr, Admlnistratnra of ltiehard Huntor, deooasod; Peter ji'ru, Anininistrtitiirbr Isaac Uorsuch; K. M, Wngors, AduiinistroUir of irimofred Makors: John Wolfe, Ad-ministrator of Davi)tt Wolle; Charles Banhurry and Wathiaa Stotler Alrnlnistratdra of Matthew Bt"tler; I latt G. Boardslv, sxdoiinistratortif C. C. Siuions; Rich Ant 0. Kenfer, A VTuiuistiator of Sarah Keefer; Joseph Btaats, Admlmst'ator of Waller McCrea; T. . Cole, Administrator off John Spracklin; John Mdntlre, Ad-- uilmstrator of j,hn Znlman: John Mahaffy, Guardian or Mary 4. Hoanl; J. T. Hohbs, Guardian of T, K. rKiinmnr; jaiil,Bs Rice, Gnardiua or James !Shults; Ben (or and olhfIrl- llarv oy Strcker'e Guardian's Adraiais-trntor; Ohalol. Jackson, Guardian of W. H. and Harriet , " Jai-ksonj Hy Evralt, Ouanlian of George W, and ' M-V-Kowell;T.'ACktey, Guardian of Rachel Pollock; J5rJotB CupnlnghAm. Gaardian of George O. Lybarger; John M. liugiin, Ou-irdian of Margaret . E. and Mary Annlluganj M. White, lurviving Executor of A. Mul- jamin ivanileiJ-.Guardiao ori8imeon and William Slellin ll'eraons Interested may file-wrltten exoeptioi s to any - of said accounts, mi or before tho 14th day of November A. I). 1WI4. at which time said accounts will be for keor- iDir auAeetUoment ' THOMAS V. PAKliB, Prnlxite Judge K. C. O. THE OLD ALLEN FARM. Ov the Columbus road half a mils from tho flnnri'shing village of Kredoricktowo, Knox Gounty, Ohio. This Firm enjoys the reputation 01 ooing among mo nesi in . the Htale. The aril tor all purposes is notnxcelled by Any; it U ttol-ktid mellow TEN INCH W DEEP! and iarich And good TWKMTV-WVE DEEI'I - It oouuius lo0 acres, has good huiUinga and is well fenced. ..- . At present It is nearly all in timothy and clover. 1 sell it because 1 can't work it. Out 4, Km . JAMES tt A1XEN. . A GOOiD STOCK FAltM FOft SALE ' fnui nhttrtfroraefrti trt wll her farm xttuatecl In Hit- X Towtxthln. Knox Co. O., con turning 140 Bart of land, 100 or which ar cleared na ttu id timttar, nr, beach, j3 Thi tract baa abuadaxce nf running waU-r on it novor foiling up ring, iic, 1 It baalon it an orchard pplcir, clVerrievo. Alao a (food barn and carn.jt . house. Itiiuaoi of the iwta owned by Johnntaa Tbura . tfn. at hirdecrue. Prl' o 1 10, per acre; (MtytuenU made ruv. Enquire of Wip. McClcnand, Jit. Vernon. Knoi County, O. , . .JiVNICKH, TJJUjST04V. . Oct 4 wJ-Ri. .- Froclanialiori toy tlie Governor.'. T' . ' ' P tatb ft Ohio, ) " '" ElfrtTTtT DKPARTHIirT. J t :i ' 7 . . Oolcmbc-,0., Sopt tt-d.lWU.) I, JOHX BROUttH, OoTercor of hi Statu of Ohio, do hereby notify the qualified Elector of t lie State of Ohio, to aixcmblo in their rnpctlTo Townships and WarJ. at tbu unual p la-en of holding elections, on Tue liar, btiinv tho Kith dovy of tfoTomHr, A. D. Ki4. and thn and the o prm eed, aa the law directs, to elect TwvN-TT Oxb KiMtera of PrMident and Vice Preaident of the . (IniUdStaifl, in pirwnee totlio OoaitituUoasnd Uvi pi n United Statea, and f thia State. ia teaticnODT Whereof, 1 bare hereunto not my naraa, and canted the fl .-at 3oal of the State of Ohio ' . , r to bo afflxad, at Coliinibiia.the twenty-wcond "" day of ileptnmbfr. in the year of our Lord, akAL. OneThi...and Kitrht Hwwdi-dawlfllxly-Fonr, f and in the Kiurhth Ninth yearitf the lndcpcn. " ' ; dnnee of the united Statin of America, fly thtflft-vwnor. . . JOHN UKUUOH. W W. Arhstro-o, Sec'y of Statfl. Oct 4, V4, ImtTM. , . ' " GEORGE IIADLEY'fJ ESTATE. TftK nnaert(riieI fiabn -uly appctnled and tjaall-fimi an Adm'ronthe Otato of Ocorga Hadley, late ct Kjii' Co,, Ohio, eliceaned. All pereons indebted to ih filiate are requitf4 to make immediate payment! and thrift harin eUimfl Mintt the a wlli preaeni tbn to the .odei-eigaad for allowanea. ' Oct 19, W.-8. JOHX L. RL'SH, A.m'r. . SToric&vonss. - - . , EB-uutnt 19 aho " : Repairers of Watches, Clocks; y - "JaeeUy, tj-ft, tf-a, " , STEV0TL BRANDS, made to Order. Also Gold and Silver Plating. ' -, Boomjr OppoiiltVit Lybrand lloute, . Way lD-4mo alt. Tiaxoa, Obio. ELI M. IlOLLlSrOTS LSTA'l E NOTICES hereby j.lrtn lh.t the qoderwigned ban beett dulr anpointd md nuaiir.od aa AdmiuUtrator en Ohio, dfc'd AM penwnt havii) ciRimn afvin4 mii (ate - ill nrf ut the aniua riulj proven ftirwlllement and )n' iifii lrtt'd are ruquired to up wit'imt dfla. , --Vt 18, 4-w- - ilAKWAii KOi.U.YjtR. J . : i ipeeftuveoi r.ii m. in'iiiswr, mw oi unm vouusij - - v WA p Crt4 lot f ? -I U-l-aiA,- lav Villi. Tlie Secretary of theTroaiory glvoa notice thattub MriptioM wtU be nceirtd for Coupon Treaaory Note, payable three yaarf from Aug. 161 Q, 18M, with eml an- noal Intercut at the rata of mtvenand three-fenthi parj een t par an n tin, principal anl interest both to bJ paid la lawful money. Thete notei will be conrartlblo At the option of the holderat maturity, into ilx per cent gold beftf rtg bo ml, payablo not let than flva nor mora Lhao IWiAuty yaara from their date, aithe GnTarumetit i'ay aleat. ,TSey will ba laeued in denomlnatlona of $W, $1(0, $600, $1,-. 000 and $6,000. and alt nubacrtptions moat be for fifty dollars or aome mnltlpla ot Bfty dollar. k The notoi will Iq trantonlttod to the pwaera free of transportation charges as soon after tlie receipt of tht original Certificates of Deposit an Khy can be prepared. Aa the notes draw intenr4 from Aogat 15, parsons making deposits subsequent to that date, must pay tbe Interest accrued from date, o f note to date of deposit Parti os depositing twenty-Ave thousand dollars and tpwards for theaa notes at any one time will be allowed a commission of one-quarter of ona per cent, which will be paid by the Treasury Department upon the re ceipt of bill lor the amount, certified to by the officer with wham the deposit was made. No deductions for commissions must be made from tht deposits. SPECIAL ADVANTAGES OF THIS LOAN It ia a National Satijvos Dank, offering a higher rate of tntoreat than any other, and th$ iW tecurtly. Any savings bank which, pays Its depositors InT7. 8, Notes, couaiders thaTit is paying In tho best circulating medium of the country, and it cannot pay in anything better, for Its awn assets are either In government securi ties .ir In notes or bond payable In government paper, It ia fifu-lly convoolent as a temporary Or permanent Investment, The notes can always he sold for with in a f action of their face end accumulated Interest, and are the best security with banks as collattcrals forls counts. " a Convciiille iiiio a Six per tent. 5-.0 Gold Bond, In addition to the very liberal Interest on the notes for throe years, this privilege of conversion Is now worth About three per cent per annuo), for the current rate for 5 30 Bonds Is not less than nine per cent, premium, and before the war the premium on six !er rent. U. S. stocks was over twenty percent It will be seen that the astuel profit on this loan, at the present market rate .Is notices thsn ten por cent, per annum. ' lla Exemption from Sialc or Municipal Taxation. Bntaside from all Uie atVrantagetwt have enumerated a special Act of Congress exempli all txmdi and Treasury note) from local taxation. On the average, this exemption U worth' about two per cent, per annum, according to the rate of taxation In various parts of the oountry. It Is believed that no securities offer so great Induce. ments to lenders as those Issued hythe government. In. .all other Conns of indebtedness, tbe faith r ability of private patties, or stock companies, or sepltraco comma, nttles, pnlv, is pledgbd for payment, while the whole 1 roporty of the country is held to socure the discharge of all the obligations of the United Stitcs. ! While Uie aorernmcnt offers the most Uben terms - for Its loans, It believes that the very atrongost appeal !Will bo to the loyalty and patriotism of the people. : Duplicate certificates avlU be issued for all deposits. 'The psrty depositing must endorse -upon Ihe original elrtiQcate the denomination of notes required, and 'whether they are to be issued In blank or payablo to ' order. When so endorsed It must be left with tbe of-deer receiving the deposit, to he foraarded to the Treasury Department. . , SunncnirTioxi wiLit Bl aicxiviD by the Treasurer of tlie UsItedStates, at Washington, tho severaJsAssIst-ant Treasurers and designated Depositaries, and by the First National Bank of Colombo, O. ... First National Bank or Cleveland, O. - Second National Bank of Cleveland, O. ' First National Band of Sandusky, O . ! Second National Bank of Sandusky, O. First National Bank of Znnesrllle, 0. Second National Bank of Zanesville, 0. ' and by all National Banks which are depositaries of public money, and,. ALL KESrECTABLE BANES AND BANKERS throughout the cnuutry wilt give further Information It AFFORD EVERY FACILITY TO SUBSCRIBERS. ' Aug IMnl. - . ' LfPPlTT'S r, , CITY DRUG STORE, S. W.'l-IPPITT, WHOLESALE AT BETAH DRUGGIST. . SEEALER J.V r JimlS OILS .VARNISHES, ; . " ' . - " ' ; AND ' i ' iria o 7ir?o. FINE TOILET SOArS, PEEFTJMERIE3 rUTTY AJSTD ftWDOV GLASS . Patent medicines,' '- . PU RE INES AND ; LIQUOKS For Medicinal Puifottt, V COAL J.N ABBON. '' : - OIL,' v ' 3T TnB BsltRRL OR HaLF B.RRF.I OVtT 508 COAL OIL LAMPS SOW OJi HAXD ' To which we Invito the trade. - ' PHYSICIANS rRESCRIPTlONS Aocuratoly Compounded. - ' - Guodi Warranted at Reprtienled, . i -OR KO BAI.R. rt - 1 .- CITT.DRUQ STORK 1 ' OpnoAlte lb Kenran TT F" CANCER DOCTOR. , :-r J"amcis"D. Jo1tnon, , OF CLKVKI.AWD. - " "1 TTOrfjD inform all who may be afflicted with Ceaoer ,V that he Is prepared to cure test forniifisoie dis ease by a process dinVrtn? from all othsm. known only to himself, HVi treatment consists in the application, of a single plaster, composed of European hsrbs. eao Ins; little or no pain. On examination ko will h. abl. to say to the patient whother their case is eorahl.or not and will guaranty a p.rsnaneot cure of all he undertakes. Also, will frnarranto. permanent cur. in the worst osse ot RhumaUsm. HfcvURK-cxe Mrs. Samuel Nrv. Geo Kastrller. F R. Osnll. and flavid Morey. MU Vernon, O.j John Dally, OntTliurg, Knox Co.. OJiio. tlrnox At his resiiluce. Ejilford. fuvslinpa Co.. f)., 3 miles Houth oj Cleveland. ' (July 26, lid--. To Painters and Builders. TINPPF.O Oil, SiUtiUe warranted ecnal to pure J l-ionseed Oil. aud much choaper. Also Tore grouod Vt hite l.esd and Ziuo at .slav l'J, l64-ly. WARNER MILI.KR'S, Aycr's Boreaparilla .OCT 01 KB. . , ;; Had Willis Guy lord Clark written do bet tor.tl.ig than tbe following, lio would have raqVed as puo of our sweetest poet: - Solemn, yet beautiful to view, r fit Month uf my heart I thnudawnest here, With sad and faded leavea to etr-nt The summer's inelancho'y bUr. The moaning of thy winds I hear. As tht red Huniot dies afar, Aud bars of purple clouds appear, . ( ' Obscuring every western star. "Tfiou solemn month! I hoar'tby voice, It tells mr soul of other da vs. , ,-.' When but to live was to rejoice, When rth was lovelv to my nse 1 Oh tlnionn britrht--oh blHsed hours. Where are those Hrini; mpiurei not j 1 aitk mr sulrtt's wuarieu iiuwui I mk my pale and fuvured brow 1 look to Nature, and behold :. , Uy life's diip embleiuA runtllug loand, hues of criuxHon and of gold The years dead honors on the ground And slghiug with tlie winds, 1 feci, While their low pinions murmur by, How much their sweeping tones reveal Of human life and destiny, " When Spring's rieltKhtaome mnmentu ihotte, They came in seohvra from the West : Thny bore the woodlurlc's melting tone, They stirred the bluo lake's trlasny breast : Through Bummer, faliiting lu the heal, They lingered in the fort-st shade ; - ' But ohantivd and strengthened now. they beat) Iu sto ni, o'er mountain, glen an'i gJade. now like these transports of the breat-t - When life Is freab and joy ia new ; Soft as the halcyon's downy nest, And transient all ni they ate true! 1 Tbey etir Ihe leaver, iu that bright wreath. Which Hope nhnut her fi.rehfau twines, TIM tirlefs hotttighs around it bit-athe, Then Pleasure' Hp its smile returns, Alnfl for Time, and Death, and Care, What gloom around our way they fling I l.U clouds In Autumn's (rusty aii, ' The burial wtgeant of tbe Hpriug. v ' The dreams that each surcertcive year 9eemtdl)a:hcu huait tf bii(hter pride, t lstlikowitheied leaves eppear. , And sleep in darkueside by side. MiltraL How General Sickles Kcgards the Chicago Platform and McClellan. In a letter to rhilajolpbia, Gen. Sick-lef very poiutedly exposes tlie weakness tad wickedness of the copperhead party, ia its present war upon, toe Administration anJ the country. We wish every Democrat would read and digest the following paragraps which we clip from his very able, aud effective lettcT: . It is difficult, to understand why the framcrs ot the Chicago rmtiurui, tlie authors of this reproach upon our uriny and this disparagement of the martial fortitude and resources' of our country, should have chosen a distinguished offi ccr of the army to execute a schome of policy'wkiuh proposes .to subdue armed rebellion by the cessation, of hostilities against it,, and whiuh contemplates, by means oi a Convention ot the states, the reconciliation of enomies who have waged irreconciliablcwar against each other for four years. ' ' Yet inorb difficult it is for me to com prehend, except upon the supposition of an retire change ot opinions, bow it is consistent , with the fame and character of General McClellan to become the ex ponent of a party controlled by Messrs. Vallandigham, Voorhees, Long, Powell, Harris, isiglor, oeyraoui ana ood. .Gen. McClellan urged the President to enforce a. general conscription to fill up our armies. Gov. Seymour denounced Federal conscription as unconstitutional, and characterized a draft as a disastrous drain upon our populotton. ' Geo. Mp-Clellan arrested the Legislature of Mary land to prevent a meditated sot ot treas on. . , Mr. valiandigham denounces all such arrests as violations of private right and dangerous to public liberty. Gen. McClellan attributed his inability . to cross the Potomac and follow up his vio-tory M Antietam to the want of means of transportation and equipment for his army. - Senator Powell boasts that he never has voted, and never will vot, n man or a dollar for the army. Gen. Mo-Clellan declares that he"could not look his gallant comrades in tho face and tell them their labors and i aerifices had been in vain. The Chicago Convention says thoy have been iu vain, and demands aa immediate cessation of hostilities, "oecause the war has been, a failure throughout. ' Gen.'MoClellollan, rising superior 10 the despondencv which followed the Peninsular campaign, recorded this declaration in his celebrated letter of July 7, 18C2, addressed to the President from the camp at Harrison's Landing ; "Tho Constitution and the Union must be preserved, whatever may fee the cost in time, treasure or blood.'V The Chicago Convention denounces the war for the Union as an "experiment that has failed, and prescribes a Convention or "othor peacej able means," as .the limit of further re sistacce to the demands of rebel leaders. SQ, Home! that synonym for the sweetest sanotitiesl how it falls upon the heart of the homeward streaming crowd. That Ttxod boundary of peaoe that society can not encroach upon, where we can look calmly out upon the frowns of the world and our perplexed, spirit find inspiration of strength and space for rest.. . Home! where gentle- memories Meal upon us with shadows of the twilight, and forever tapestry the walls, while the voice of the music ii hushed, and" each soul within' the silent circle calchos nearer glimpse of heaven, a 'dearer .view of sweet forms and faces crone before. Happy are ttos who can turn from . the festive gayetieg oi the : world, and meet outstretched arms and loving heart in whoso affection there is no decay and no deccit--'at home" With eyes of hope and tearful rapture' we look forward to our arrival at home. And when our vital lamp burns low, and the golden bowl began to shudder, aud the silvei cord to nutwino, frt our look be opon the face, we bent love! Oh, let . die at home! Mai. Gb. Birnet died hut week in Philadelphia. lit was a ton of James (1. liifney, tho noted anti-slavery cditifr. He hsul undo a F-pTeri li J rcpnt.-.tion ( a milita'r' cl!jccr.' ' ' " ' THE KOUEOUS OF UECEL PRIS u . - . on. -'- teller from Wm. L.llarrod lo his ;Yirc-"ll0YY Le Escaycd-Sccnes In-a KcJjcl - Prison Terrible Destitution and Stanatlonlln cola Forever. Atlanta, Oa., Sept, 26th, 1861.' 'MV Deae Wue :i promisod you in my lnit letter, that I would give you a history of my capture, and prison Hi'o, while in Hood's mess. On the 2 2d of July, about two o'clock, I was "taken iu out of the wet" by tbe Johnny Rebs. Our corps was sent on the extiemo left to build a" fort, tout!- soO-Taftor we-coru-uienced workxthe' Johnnys attacked us in the roar' and flank; We'soon' got ordcrf to fall back. Tho corps scattered in every direction, aljuost, aod I fell in with a detail from ' my regimant, that was throwing up rifle-pit. near, by. . On my way back to the regimont I found four or five of the Pioneer boys, and I stopped with them for the purpose of getting them out of danger. ' At that time tho picket officers rode along and asked me to pilo up qome rails across the road to stop the progress of tho enemy. J sot the boys to work, and by the time I got it completed the rebs had got all around me, and had the D'visiou in, the same fix. I mado several strategetio movements, but failed in every one. I only had one more chance of escapo, and it was a dangerous one. In order to do that I had to. fall back from my present position, and in doing so, the cavalry made a dash and politely invited me to join Hood's mess, with a number ot revolvers drawn on me. . ;(, ',; F.,:. ; '. i I did not stop toarguo the question with them, as I had arms, and they outnumbered me fifty to one. . They soon relieved me of my haversack and canteen, then hastened 'to march mo to the rear, where they had quite a number of our boys. The first one I knew waa Capt. Bostwick. They then took us about seven miles around, and finally got us to Atlanta sometime after dark. Marched us to Hood's headquarters, and two of his imps requested our names, j They, then marched us to East Point, six miles froui" Atlanta, and by that time we were tired enough to lay down on the ground and take -a "short sleep; then daylight came, and "IP got up, shook off the loose dirt, and looked around, i tie boys reminded me of seven or-eight hundred hogs, piled up in a small pon. Well wg staid there one dayn two pights, and they started us for Ander-souvllle.. Wa.J'd-.a. wroh to Griffin, forty-five mil , thore' we took tho cars, ana reached our destination on the; 28th, just before sundown ; and as I marched in at the Large gate, 1 sunk down about five -feet Jen inchea in my shoes, and staid , there, till I marched outi.on. the" 18th of September. , t. ' - . It is called -Camp Sumtsr, enoloscd with largo hewed timbers set endways in the eround. about fifteen lofitliiKh. It contains pome twenty -five acres, aud what is termed a dead line, gome eighteen feet from the stockade which takes up some four acres, and a quagmire in the center of four acres mora, making eight acres, ; this deducted from twenty-five, loaves seventeen acres for 33,000 to camp on. I will explain what 'this dead line was for : 'it was to keep men from the stock-ado. If one of the boys would lean against it the sentinel? would shoot him. They ' itot furloughs ? for evory Yank they killed, in: that way,-not to exoeod thirty days.i Ihardly know how to de. scribe the prison ; the soil is very sandy, and there S not a spear of grae or shade iu tbe prison, and the' most of the boys stripped of their blankets, and the most of them of thoit clothing, and supplied with the rebs old lousy, ragged duda. Hundreds of them come in with nothing to eover their nakedness but an old shirt and pants, when I gay this I mean just what I say,. and nothing else-rand tbey have to lay around iu tho sand and hot snn in the daytime, aad at night lay ex posed to the bleaching dews, and in a few. days thoy have"; to meet their God in'onother and better world., While I4 waa in prison, the. average of deaths was about 135 per day. The first weok in August the loss in deaths was eleven hundred and thirty. What do you think of that?V hm told by a soldier that was": captured at. Chickamanga that one hundred and seventy-five of his regiment wore captured there, and there were only fiftoon of th";m left and another instance whore fifteen wore captund and only throe frft-awful to relate, but ,it is" trutr. Thousands of those that died weri for the-want of something to eat. As soon as they got down weak" they lost their appctitoand could not eat the grub that w-..,i1jLf.i.i!T-;fliori irt font i. torn, r M lit wai IssUol-.them, in fact it. Was tot fit for a hog,to eat; nothing but starvation would induce a buinan eat it. .: (Jur food consisted of corn bread mads of unsifted meal. In place ot- bread we got one half pint of corn' meal, sometime half a pint of rico, and half a pint of nigger peas halt eat up with bugs ; and sdinetiuiei they . cooked . them shucks bugs and dirt together, and issued a piut lo a man, fiai would always sour before we'got thenu,.. Sometimes we got a little molasses ; sometimes a little meat, pork or' beef- pork about one mouthful, beef about three. We. hardly ever got more than two of tn tse articles in one day, and very often didn't get any never cot enough for mora than one meal per day, Mt.A raWtlAH T 0 1 ' iVsCtf fl- A n tj-i OUU OtUa TAMVlsl WAA kssttW sW.lrV'4 U U eat it. At general thing the pork oould walk with maggots. And iometimes the beef was so rotten we didn't have to cook it. A ratiou of wool for three days was a stick about half as large as your arm. MfUY. 1 thou"bt I had seen hard sitrhts, but I never saw an) thing to compare with Camp Samtcr. 1 have seen hunuredri of our brave boys lay irt tbe hot sun, unable to r.iiao t'.icir lie dtor brush tho flies from their f oo , and dia without a fiiend to bo'p tlifni -to fiRythin. : As soon as a mar. t.l-J fivk bs 3 -Litked (tit J'rooi u.ndr his blanket tadio, -e haljfVl lose alf fetliiag toward tuoir felWf-au j j alter they are iu pnMttl a short time. could hot help any duly those belonging . ... .. ... 1 17 V .. . 1 .... ' to my regiment; wniijn i viturea every day.- If they did got "sick we Jlad nothing to ive tUeiri, or-oVer theTr naked-ness, e principle disease is scurvy and Btaiitttion. The thba commenced mying the prisoners from Andersojville about the first of September, to fsome point unknown .to us at that timer; they told us to Charleston, for a general exchange. On the evening of the 17th the glad tidings oame that two' thousand of Khormarrt men wore to be exchanged at JVtlitnt.t.Jt ooutmjo! pre-,4'''f.'7u;nt. On the evoniog ot the loth we had or ders to full in aod march to the car,,! which we did without hesitation. We soon got to Sherman's mess, and found it a better place to board thin Hood s sswss' was, I never saw tho army look better than it does at the present timo. J was sorry to find on my return that some o'f my associates were no more. Jiut suoh is the fate .of war. . I don't know how soon wo will enter on adother campaign I want you to cot some good cloth and make me two or three good shirts ; those wc-draw are too small. Uncln.'Sam is going; to give us prisoners a suit oi clothes tree ol charge. He is a good old lollow ain t he r I must close for the present My health is improving.' Hoping this will find you and the rest of the family in good health, L remain, , .Yours truly, - - ' ' , William L. IIarrod P. S.. Down with "Little Mao" and up with Father Abraham 1 that is what's the matter, Give my respects to all tho Union men, aud tell the- copperheads l despise them. - . "'i W, L. . II ; Vbrt Natural. In the "Little Country Girl"-in the Atlantic for August, the fading wasting Emily, who had eutlercd her lno long and was about de parting for the land of spirits, is made to say ; "I suppose you think," e.aid she at last, in a low, sweet voice, "thut it is easy for a sick girl to go. Hut 1 love every thing I've been lookinjr nt. It my be more beautiful thero. but it will not be the same: I shall want to see exaotly this stretch of water and the Islands beyond, and the shadows on those woods away off in the distance, and the field where lather has mowed the gross , for bo many years. Every summer, as soon as June came in, I've listened, early in the morning, before noise began;., to hear tho whetting ofthe soytho, and .then waited for the smell of the hay to came in at the operi.'winduw.' Those maples,- .on tho knoll, are very dear friends! I've boon glad with, thetd in the 'Spring," aud serry with them in t'e Fall,'throujh all these, years. The birds and the dandelions "are all my friends- I've waited for them every year, and it .eenied as if the same one came back. You well people .can't understand it. They ere near to me. I enter into the life ol each one of them, just as you do into the Jives of vour hu: man frionds. Spirits go everywhere,' see everything. -That will be too much. I'm attached to just this spot'of earth. And then I'm attachod to myself. I can't realize that I shall be tho same, and I don't : wautto give! myself up, poor miserable creature a-1 am." w' '.".'. : ' ' We put it to the fhoughtful reader ifJ that is not very natun l, and very well put, wnetner anytmng evor occurred like it or Lot. It will do to think about and dream over. - The Successful Car.dlda.cs In Indiana.I The following are the State officers (all Union) elected in Indiana Jast Tuesday, by a majority approximating 24,09C; - Governor . ......... -Oliver P. Morton. Lieut. Governor, . , .Conrad Baker. . . Seo. State .......... Nelson Trjisler, - Auditor. . i . ... ... ..Thomas M'Carthy. Treasurer . i . . .' ..John L. Morrison Attorney General . . . .D. E. Williamson; -The successful candidates for Congress ore as follows; those marked with a star being members of the present Congress: ' I C. M. Allea, Union . II Michael C. Kar, Dein. . -;v III Ralph Hill," Uuion. . , - ; IV J. II. Earauhar,' Union. t; V George W. Julian, Union. . ; VI Ebeiicr Dumont, Uniotis VII H. D:'Washbuihe Union, prob. VIII GodIove S. Ortrr,-Uniou.r IX Suhuyler Colfux, Union. X Joseph -8. Defrees, Union. . , ' XI Thomas N. Stilwell, Union. , Jefp. Davis In hia Augusta speech said: ' ' ' " " : - '- "We must beat SHERMAN) we must march into Tenhossee, thore we will draw 20,000 to 80,000 men to our standard, and so strengthened we must pufh the enemy back to the banks of the Ohio, and tTiut give the peace party of tht North an accretion no puny editorial can give." Ifaus "the rebels nf the South and the peaoe party of tba North base" all their hopes upon Union disaster. t Beat 8uer-UA.v; slaughter the Union armies; march over the dead bodies of Union soldiers; wade through seas of Union blood, to the Ohio river, aod aid thft peace party of the North! iayl Jeff. Davis. Let the Union armies be defeated, and McClellan. can be eleotdd, oays the rebel peace party of the North. . l)o you discover any difference in the principles and aims ,of the fi-hting rebels of the South and therym-patbiziu,; rebola ofthe North? Gazette. ' . , vjr,Printprs' errors are sometime very laughable. A youug' clergyman printed a sermon, the subject of whioh was the net ewitv for moderate and rational recro'- alion. in. which ocenrred the passage, Men should vrork -aud play too." The Want of a stroke ruiucd it, and the re!i;-loin world nj scandaliz.d by - reading, 'Mn ihfnl!d work aad plat loo.", y . JudRC Holt'g Kcport OH the SCCrCt VJU'VOlUtlOIiarj ASSOClatiOQ lU lllO LI. W e$I. v ,. . y "The large Dnily paphrs, the past week, huw.econtainod the report of Judge Holt, of Kf.t the Judgo Advocate General of the Uuitod Statesmen the recent dcvelop- Imcjjjs as to the exiBttfoco of secret trea- (onauij societies in tho -tycjtern btates-The docunieut is Very -lougj- and would fill a sheet like ours. But it ia vory able and conclusive, and establishes iSBfuc't of the treasonable cliaiuetni o(-tVffiiC' trials in luu.aaa, and the oscapo of Dodd, the head of the order in that State, -whilo his case wasjiendihg, and tho testimony ofsucli a eitaractcr as to convict him of treason; a(e all odnclusive evidences of the guilt of theso assouTatians. : We Lava. not room to publish Judge Holt", report, but we copy from the N. Y. . Tribune a sumniiug up of the facts . as established by it. . . There has been no such formi dable a conspiracy in modem times, but it is exposed, and. the leaders are marked men for all future time. Thero can be no dou'it that the Democratic loaders organized,' in at least fifteen States, a vast, oath-bound conspiracy: 1. To incite soldiers to desert from the armies, and to harbor and proteot :' deserters: II. To discourage enlistments and resist the draft: III. Tocircate disloyal and treasonable publications: IV, To communicate with and impart intelligence to the enemy: ; V. To aid the enemy by recruiting for them, or assisting them to rocruit within our lines: VI. To furnish the enemy with munitions of war: VII. To cooperate with the Rebels in thoir invasions of loyal States: .VIII. To de stri.y the military stores and property of l,x l)V,)...l rt.; tv m Tinate, and get out of the way, Union cit lufli'suiiiuiuuiuiij-iijui; Av. AOHHaas- izens obnoxious lor their zeal, and Union soldieri and Government employoos: X. lo persecute and oppress, or drive off, l mon citizens, and destroy their proper ty: XI. To establish a North Western Confederacy of Btates, to be torn by force of arms from the Federal Union. At the head of this picantio conspiracy stands Valiandigham. And who is. Val-landighaift' The soul ofthe Chicago Convention the mover of McPJellati's nomination as the Dcmocratio candidate! for the PreaidoDCj tUa hadine stumn advocate in the West of MoClellan's eleo. tion. Through tho wmle body, of ..tie conspiracy, in overy one of the State, cursed with its poisonous prosenod, work autivoly and mischievously ; prominent Jjemocrats, recognized and following as the leaders of thoir party in tho localities here thoy live. - : . . ..- IN THE AlII ANO DID IE VIIT SI I,'' With, a very few'cuta and thrusts. Gen. Logan madd shreds of the last of the res olution lies in tho Chicago -Platform: " the sympathy of the Democracy is heart ily and earnestly extended to the soldiers of tho Army and tbe seaman ofthe Navy." lie said: - In what way da they sympathize with us? By resolutions that the army is o noble bund of patriots, that the war has been successful, and, they are -proud of the army? No, sir. . Thay say the wris a failure.. Do they congratulate us because we have planted our flag lu every Southern 8tatb? They say we did no bucq thing. ."Do they' 'sympathiaa with the widows and orphans of those men slain in battle? Not with one'of them. Ia it by ever visiting the" army' and associating with the soldiers and officers? If-bo I have failed to' seo theiu.T T tcaiil any man to tell me when Pendleton, Valiandigham, except the timet he wag tent through the lines, orjfbod, or Ryiidert, or BtU nwiit, or Richmond, orJRobinion, or Allen, or any of lw rest of them, hate ever tome to tee the army and take the hand of the toldicrt. ' Not one of thenvvr came to see tutinoe the war began, after we passed south of Cairo. I have met other men there; men from Indiana, Illinois, and all the Western States. 1 1 speak now ofthe leaders. I have seen Governors; I have seen half of a legislature come and talk to the toys; and see that they were :ared for, but not of that party. I am willing to sell out my interest in their sympathy for a very small price. , - ' . t ' -'" 7 Easily Satisfied. " A Dutchman and hls'intcndod appeared before a newly installod Dutch squire., to be married. Bidding them join hands the squire began: ' ! -; . "Haas, ditsh yoa lofe this woman bo mootcb as yon can?" ; ' , .' ; . -, ' Yaw'" replied llabj. . , v , "Katerine, dosh you lofo Ilaos so mootch as you-can?", No,";promptly replied Katerine. '-Dosh' you lofe him enuflf to marry him?" . ; I'" - ' . . "Yaw," replied Katerine. ' ' "Veil, den, I brononnoe yon man and woniang." - ' '. . Huns asked the charge. " "Oh! nnting, noting," replied the qu.ire, "if you ishsati.hfiod I ish ttoa'l ' -'sn ,,-. . .-- J ' ." .t tST:We clip the following odd conceit from thoN. Y. Tribune : . Unionist to Cbpperheaca la Bangor : '.MoClollaa can not be' elooted.' It is o impossible to elect him as to turn back the waters of the Kennobo and make thourfiow up tho dara. Nothing short of Almighty power can .po change the hearts ofthe North as to induee them to yiold in this struggle; and, unfortunately tor the Copperheads, God ii not flu their sido."-'- - .' Soldier proud of his one lotr, proud of hisoliovronsof honorable service, proud of his country, proud of his politics cut- tin" in: "TJo, find llo ennnot bo on their gida-whi-fi ll-i maintains hia preent re fyactabimy." ... , Solomon CTunoEs,wollkiiown in tho Muskingum valley aa one of our moat " active and successful business men'," died at Zanesvillo a short time t-ince. Ho was sixty-eight years of sgei lie had acquired an imnteuse property. Vm someears he had resided in Chicago, where bis business energy was tho the mo of general remark. Ha was a very on-, thusiaatio XJnioa uian, and contributed liberally to the good cause. ,'. : " . . -r"TT r. ..... . " . Lr- cauaUian provinces ave agreed upon a plan for a contodorition for homo purposes. There is to be a sort of Con gre) with JrOo'alaturo ia each provinc. But all these things remain to be sane--tioned, or annulled by the British Gov ernmlint. -' Gov. Uaiin, has- bciiI hi juossago. to tho Legislature tt Louisiana, . wherein he discusses the local matters of interest.--. The Legisktaro oa tho lQh inst., elected R. K Cutler, and Clunks Smitli, U. S. Senators.' , ''.'' . Ejr John A. Dix said:. "If any .maa hauls down the American flog si oot him on the spot." Geo. B. McClellan said: ' "If any man hauls' down the American '.flag, ex- haust the resources of statesmanship" to induce him to haul it up again. Montgomery Blair was osptured by i the guerrillas, from a train near Lexing- i ton last week, but escaped from them.., t He proceeded to. Lexington and tuado & strong Union speech. - . , 23" The total amount of National Bank circulation. issued to October StU, la $53,515,-..' 730. Theamoqnt isstied for the week end-' ing Saturday, October 15th, inclusive, is $1,-' 861,200." Total amount to date, 155,676,730. , .,- r- . v x ) IjuK stables of the Brighton trotting course, near Boston, were burnt last week, . and twenty-threo valuable horses, ome of,, them noted for thoir speed were eonsura- '-med. - " ' ffSyAn editor having road in anothw, paper that the use ot a certain kind of 1-tobacco, if a man sniokeaor chews, will ' make him forget that ho owes a dollar in ' the world, innceeatly ; concludes that r many of his subscribers have boon fur-. nished wit) tbe. article, ..... .... v.. , '.',. - XQrrHIVATit JvDOJII-NTI-f MATTERS op Faitu. It is a preposterous' thing . that men -can venture their souls where 1 they will not venture their money; for ' they will take their religion npon trust, ? but not trust a synod about the goodness- . of half a crown. William Penn. - v , BS!.The Richmond Whig says tha rcbels are now havinsr their-"annual 1 streak of bad luck.M. When they eel ' whipped it is all oaiag to bad luck, but ; when thoy whip us it is the result of their 1 indomitabla valor, of course. i,' . U3u A minister travelling through tha.' West, ' some yearj ftsro. asked a ladv on whom he called, what fho thought of tha ' doctrine of total 'depravity. "Oh," she J replied, "I think it is a good doctrine, if ' tne people would only live up to it. . ' t . tsaThe Oxford Democrat tells of an old lady i i i Lowoll widow of Hannah ' Andrews -who has reared thirteen ohild-.- rea, and ha . i ic6 hundred thirty five f"-1 tcenda'ntsi' CVerily, she hat -done whal k she could. ' -i ' - i . ; r ' 1 tryA lady in a predicainent--crcuising the street, the mud ankle deep, the rain pouring down, her ' umbrella - turned by" the wind, and her hat blown off into a mud puddle. " - ' - - 1 i : ' " ' V.- - -. "' ,i ': JKiTThere exists a singular domestio fashion in Duchen, Germany. There the "unterrocW (ohemise), ol tha women' will often be hauded down and worn, for three generations. k ' : r, . The question is often discussed. ' whettcr t.ie savages enjoy life. We sup-' pose tbey do, as they alwayi seem anxious, to take it when thoy get a chance. ' ; Stubbs said to one of his debtor. "Isn't it about time that you paid ma that little bill?" 'My dear sir" was tha--consoling reply, "it's not a question .of time, it'B a question of money. ' , 8irTi."Paddy," said a wsir, "your ears are too long." "Divilabit ov ' thrubbla does that give roc, but yours are too short altoithcr for the brayiug baste that yeca be" ;. V - -. . . 8l"She isn't all that fanoy painted her," bitterly exclaimq a rejected loverr aud, worse .than that, aho inn t all tbat she paints her&elf. - , , , tSTA Salem machinist has invented an' automaton that will smoke a cigar jmit at . patural as anybody. Every raokr ehould cava one. '.'.,,,. Secretary ftantoa baa gone to tl L.rmy of the Tolomac, with a view to ob. tuning information upon which to base his estimates for the onsuifjg year. ' Fkance gives assurance tbat tha rebel p privat-een building iS her porti (hill not be allowed tj Bail, . : i - Da. Bkllotvs has roturnod from Calii forn:a with $200,000 in gold for the Saul- taryCoraraisaion. . . v ' .sf The voting of the Ohio soUiors In tbj army of the Potomac stands about Id 'Onion to I Pcraocrat'. . . ' t.The you:ig geiitleiiun who fi '.W ii" to a p.3. i.n has had liis win;;s cl;n- '. s!rf:n:iiAV and -fi. ,'tt o-ft-n- ) : '"

'1' ' ' . -A- i r i I -a 4) 1. . . vr S A AAA (!U N V &; m ii.lr.li 1 H -( ; - s i I i I S I 3 I ' I 1 . r , I . IKVtXlCl TO POL1TIOH,' LITEUATUHM, JCIJ-TH' ANi GtZTXJ&ltA GENEIt AH, IIVXKIJLICrKNCDE. t ' " MOUNT VERNON, OHIO. TUESDAYof EMBBK& v. N'v rv VOL. X. r III IH. U. I. v 1 N O 52 t W. - rr- ' JIOUJt'T VEIIXON REPUBLICAN. ','" TEB1M Or BBBdCRUTIOW. (tlx moutbi f d ailvapce, ......a... $1 00 On yea: In advance,.,.......,-...... ........ 4 00 If not put! in a-ranc,.... 2 W TEIIMS OK TStANSIKHT ADVKRTISINO. One square nf 10 Hoes, out Insertion, .i.. ...... It 00 (las square earll eubeetiueiit iDiertJoD,.,,.. ...... 60 Onff square t inontli,- . ;'- ; 9 00 Ou sgaaro 6 montlis,....- . 5 00 Oat sqoare 12 mtmths, .' .. 8 00 Tiro squares J mouths,... ...'.....v..-....... t 00 Two Biuret 6 montl',1,...." t 00 Twoiurtil3ii)uthi,. 12 00 AdrorUiemanta orr two KquArei to bo otutrattd for nfi xiAid Accordingly, or ohargad At adrortlidug rate. ; l.KOAI. ADVKKTISKMK.M9, : ICiMt Innai'tioii 10 lin, Each tu0iiutM)t lnJirtioo per aquara,........, . AttocbuMot N'oticci before JuiticeN and proo... $1 00 CO S 00 t 00 Admlultr(tri and Executor! Notion., . BusiooM Cardi, not exceeding 6 lines per Annum. 6 00 Motlcoa in jUoal colamn 10 Uaea or lea, 1 0 Mo adverUrtuieot-taken except tor A ipaclfled time, nd no special notiae published in any cate, nnleaa pAtd for, At the rate of $1 00 for erory tea line, fndepen dent of tbe adrertieement referred .to. Np advertising done for Advertising Agents excopt for ca.h and prompt PV-' .. , , ". . . . AE1ITAL3 4 DEPARTURES 8. M. & N. R. R. ' - KORTH. , ' Kail Aocominmlatlon arrivea......... ii i, ii it vavo( ; .. "OOTH. , MailV.......,.'..l.....l... ....... 2. Acuomuiodatloo. .......... ...9:25 F. a. M0 a. a. .. 730 A. . .10:47 a'. '. ...4:26 r. a. tfy Cara on the- Oontral Obio Road leave Newark fnllowa: . Uoing Last, i ....6:4S A. M - " 4:30 f. u. Going Went, i M a. a. " i ' .... 11:30 r.M. .On the P. C. & 0. ruad going East, the curs leave Jfewark, 8:00 A. a. " Jl:40 A. a. OoiofF Westv being on the Central Boad, Ihev leave An above. . , CHURCH DIRECTORY. DISCIPLF3 CBCBCO, Vine Street, between Oar and McKeniie, " ' FBRSBTTERIAH CnURCn,orner Gay aod Chestnut etroeU.. Kev. I1EKVKY. EETHODIST EPISCOPAL CHUBCn, corner Oar and Chestunt streets. , - Ber. K. H, BUSH. I ROTE9TANT ErldGOPAl. CHUBCH, comer Ga nd HikAtreets, ... Rev UEU, U.JiKKSE. CATQOLIC CHUBCII, corner High and McKeniie, ' . Rev. JULIUS BRENT. jIETHOMST ' PRfeTESTANT eHDRCH, . Mechanics street between Vine and High. , , BAPTIST CHUBCU. Vine streol, between Mnlberr and Mechanics. ' Rev. J. W. ICENBABUEB. COKHREOATI0NAL CHURCH, Molber t.. between - Sugar aud Hamtmmic. . Rev. T. E. MONROE. UNITED FRE3BTrERIAN, corner Main and Sugar" atreets. . Rev. 8. M. HUTCHISON. U ETHODIST WESLEYAN : CHURCH, comer Mul-berrj And ffoestor. Rev. MR.'TRAVIa. '; -...'-'.-'. PROBATE K0TICE.' . : . i NOTICE is hereby given that the following named Executors, AdiiiioUtrators and Guardians have tiled their accounts and-vouohers fov settlement, to-wit: H, Hervey, Executor of Jaiuns Cunningham; John : . '','"' Xeers, Kenutnr ot Hfuiel uerf N l.evrlu and f. ' 'hainbisiix'jcutors of Wra. ltamo: Richard House. Ex- slcutor of Darid House; Isaac Loedy, Administrator of- l.lh 1 .Q,l. !..!. ..... It l.ltnt.f..ln. Ar r v ,.'. Rutnnicll; Ooty Farmer, AdruinistratorofEliusKAiniert v Williau Bebiittt, Adminlstsator of Oio. M llobout; Robert UclOud, Adminiittratnr of John V7, Robenson; John ljams, Administrator or w. 41. Kdgcomb; vm, McUlelland, Admiuistrator el Wra. Walker; Win. Mo i;ieuaa. Aatninlstrator f n. AL- Kamsey; John Ate lUtiro. AdmlniMtr.. ne .Tl.nmi n.uu,.l,. .l.l,n I. . - Rush, Adiuinlstiotor of I'.ewie 8. Carr; E. W. Cotton, Administrator of A. Lab men; Allison Adams, Adminia- . Korneuus I'.n-scll; Klisa H Murnhv, Ailmlnls . tratorof. Georre W. I'.vkMn' HlrhAt,! .nri RliKilhAth Unn. tr, Admlnistratnra of ltiehard Huntor, deooasod; Peter ji'ru, Anininistrtitiirbr Isaac Uorsuch; K. M, Wngors, AduiinistroUir of irimofred Makors: John Wolfe, Ad-ministrator of Davi)tt Wolle; Charles Banhurry and Wathiaa Stotler Alrnlnistratdra of Matthew Bt"tler; I latt G. Boardslv, sxdoiinistratortif C. C. Siuions; Rich Ant 0. Kenfer, A VTuiuistiator of Sarah Keefer; Joseph Btaats, Admlmst'ator of Waller McCrea; T. . Cole, Administrator off John Spracklin; John Mdntlre, Ad-- uilmstrator of j,hn Znlman: John Mahaffy, Guardian or Mary 4. Hoanl; J. T. Hohbs, Guardian of T, K. rKiinmnr; jaiil,Bs Rice, Gnardiua or James !Shults; Ben (or and olhfIrl- llarv oy Strcker'e Guardian's Adraiais-trntor; Ohalol. Jackson, Guardian of W. H. and Harriet , " Jai-ksonj Hy Evralt, Ouanlian of George W, and ' M-V-Kowell;T.'ACktey, Guardian of Rachel Pollock; J5rJotB CupnlnghAm. Gaardian of George O. Lybarger; John M. liugiin, Ou-irdian of Margaret . E. and Mary Annlluganj M. White, lurviving Executor of A. Mul- jamin ivanileiJ-.Guardiao ori8imeon and William Slellin ll'eraons Interested may file-wrltten exoeptioi s to any - of said accounts, mi or before tho 14th day of November A. I). 1WI4. at which time said accounts will be for keor- iDir auAeetUoment ' THOMAS V. PAKliB, Prnlxite Judge K. C. O. THE OLD ALLEN FARM. Ov the Columbus road half a mils from tho flnnri'shing village of Kredoricktowo, Knox Gounty, Ohio. This Firm enjoys the reputation 01 ooing among mo nesi in . the Htale. The aril tor all purposes is notnxcelled by Any; it U ttol-ktid mellow TEN INCH W DEEP! and iarich And good TWKMTV-WVE DEEI'I - It oouuius lo0 acres, has good huiUinga and is well fenced. ..- . At present It is nearly all in timothy and clover. 1 sell it because 1 can't work it. Out 4, Km . JAMES tt A1XEN. . A GOOiD STOCK FAltM FOft SALE ' fnui nhttrtfroraefrti trt wll her farm xttuatecl In Hit- X Towtxthln. Knox Co. O., con turning 140 Bart of land, 100 or which ar cleared na ttu id timttar, nr, beach, j3 Thi tract baa abuadaxce nf running waU-r on it novor foiling up ring, iic, 1 It baalon it an orchard pplcir, clVerrievo. Alao a (food barn and carn.jt . house. Itiiuaoi of the iwta owned by Johnntaa Tbura . tfn. at hirdecrue. Prl' o 1 10, per acre; (MtytuenU made ruv. Enquire of Wip. McClcnand, Jit. Vernon. Knoi County, O. , . .JiVNICKH, TJJUjST04V. . Oct 4 wJ-Ri. .- Froclanialiori toy tlie Governor.'. T' . ' ' P tatb ft Ohio, ) " '" ElfrtTTtT DKPARTHIirT. J t :i ' 7 . . Oolcmbc-,0., Sopt tt-d.lWU.) I, JOHX BROUttH, OoTercor of hi Statu of Ohio, do hereby notify the qualified Elector of t lie State of Ohio, to aixcmblo in their rnpctlTo Townships and WarJ. at tbu unual p la-en of holding elections, on Tue liar, btiinv tho Kith dovy of tfoTomHr, A. D. Ki4. and thn and the o prm eed, aa the law directs, to elect TwvN-TT Oxb KiMtera of PrMident and Vice Preaident of the . (IniUdStaifl, in pirwnee totlio OoaitituUoasnd Uvi pi n United Statea, and f thia State. ia teaticnODT Whereof, 1 bare hereunto not my naraa, and canted the fl .-at 3oal of the State of Ohio ' . , r to bo afflxad, at Coliinibiia.the twenty-wcond "" day of ileptnmbfr. in the year of our Lord, akAL. OneThi...and Kitrht Hwwdi-dawlfllxly-Fonr, f and in the Kiurhth Ninth yearitf the lndcpcn. " ' ; dnnee of the united Statin of America, fly thtflft-vwnor. . . JOHN UKUUOH. W W. Arhstro-o, Sec'y of Statfl. Oct 4, V4, ImtTM. , . ' " GEORGE IIADLEY'fJ ESTATE. TftK nnaert(riieI fiabn -uly appctnled and tjaall-fimi an Adm'ronthe Otato of Ocorga Hadley, late ct Kjii' Co,, Ohio, eliceaned. All pereons indebted to ih filiate are requitf4 to make immediate payment! and thrift harin eUimfl Mintt the a wlli preaeni tbn to the .odei-eigaad for allowanea. ' Oct 19, W.-8. JOHX L. RL'SH, A.m'r. . SToric&vonss. - - . , EB-uutnt 19 aho " : Repairers of Watches, Clocks; y - "JaeeUy, tj-ft, tf-a, " , STEV0TL BRANDS, made to Order. Also Gold and Silver Plating. ' -, Boomjr OppoiiltVit Lybrand lloute, . Way lD-4mo alt. Tiaxoa, Obio. ELI M. IlOLLlSrOTS LSTA'l E NOTICES hereby j.lrtn lh.t the qoderwigned ban beett dulr anpointd md nuaiir.od aa AdmiuUtrator en Ohio, dfc'd AM penwnt havii) ciRimn afvin4 mii (ate - ill nrf ut the aniua riulj proven ftirwlllement and )n' iifii lrtt'd are ruquired to up wit'imt dfla. , --Vt 18, 4-w- - ilAKWAii KOi.U.YjtR. J . : i ipeeftuveoi r.ii m. in'iiiswr, mw oi unm vouusij - - v WA p Crt4 lot f ? -I U-l-aiA,- lav Villi. Tlie Secretary of theTroaiory glvoa notice thattub MriptioM wtU be nceirtd for Coupon Treaaory Note, payable three yaarf from Aug. 161 Q, 18M, with eml an- noal Intercut at the rata of mtvenand three-fenthi parj een t par an n tin, principal anl interest both to bJ paid la lawful money. Thete notei will be conrartlblo At the option of the holderat maturity, into ilx per cent gold beftf rtg bo ml, payablo not let than flva nor mora Lhao IWiAuty yaara from their date, aithe GnTarumetit i'ay aleat. ,TSey will ba laeued in denomlnatlona of $W, $1(0, $600, $1,-. 000 and $6,000. and alt nubacrtptions moat be for fifty dollars or aome mnltlpla ot Bfty dollar. k The notoi will Iq trantonlttod to the pwaera free of transportation charges as soon after tlie receipt of tht original Certificates of Deposit an Khy can be prepared. Aa the notes draw intenr4 from Aogat 15, parsons making deposits subsequent to that date, must pay tbe Interest accrued from date, o f note to date of deposit Parti os depositing twenty-Ave thousand dollars and tpwards for theaa notes at any one time will be allowed a commission of one-quarter of ona per cent, which will be paid by the Treasury Department upon the re ceipt of bill lor the amount, certified to by the officer with wham the deposit was made. No deductions for commissions must be made from tht deposits. SPECIAL ADVANTAGES OF THIS LOAN It ia a National Satijvos Dank, offering a higher rate of tntoreat than any other, and th$ iW tecurtly. Any savings bank which, pays Its depositors InT7. 8, Notes, couaiders thaTit is paying In tho best circulating medium of the country, and it cannot pay in anything better, for Its awn assets are either In government securi ties .ir In notes or bond payable In government paper, It ia fifu-lly convoolent as a temporary Or permanent Investment, The notes can always he sold for with in a f action of their face end accumulated Interest, and are the best security with banks as collattcrals forls counts. " a Convciiille iiiio a Six per tent. 5-.0 Gold Bond, In addition to the very liberal Interest on the notes for throe years, this privilege of conversion Is now worth About three per cent per annuo), for the current rate for 5 30 Bonds Is not less than nine per cent, premium, and before the war the premium on six !er rent. U. S. stocks was over twenty percent It will be seen that the astuel profit on this loan, at the present market rate .Is notices thsn ten por cent, per annum. ' lla Exemption from Sialc or Municipal Taxation. Bntaside from all Uie atVrantagetwt have enumerated a special Act of Congress exempli all txmdi and Treasury note) from local taxation. On the average, this exemption U worth' about two per cent, per annum, according to the rate of taxation In various parts of the oountry. It Is believed that no securities offer so great Induce. ments to lenders as those Issued hythe government. In. .all other Conns of indebtedness, tbe faith r ability of private patties, or stock companies, or sepltraco comma, nttles, pnlv, is pledgbd for payment, while the whole 1 roporty of the country is held to socure the discharge of all the obligations of the United Stitcs. ! While Uie aorernmcnt offers the most Uben terms - for Its loans, It believes that the very atrongost appeal !Will bo to the loyalty and patriotism of the people. : Duplicate certificates avlU be issued for all deposits. 'The psrty depositing must endorse -upon Ihe original elrtiQcate the denomination of notes required, and 'whether they are to be issued In blank or payablo to ' order. When so endorsed It must be left with tbe of-deer receiving the deposit, to he foraarded to the Treasury Department. . , SunncnirTioxi wiLit Bl aicxiviD by the Treasurer of tlie UsItedStates, at Washington, tho severaJsAssIst-ant Treasurers and designated Depositaries, and by the First National Bank of Colombo, O. ... First National Bank or Cleveland, O. - Second National Bank of Cleveland, O. ' First National Band of Sandusky, O . ! Second National Bank of Sandusky, O. First National Bank of Znnesrllle, 0. Second National Bank of Zanesville, 0. ' and by all National Banks which are depositaries of public money, and,. ALL KESrECTABLE BANES AND BANKERS throughout the cnuutry wilt give further Information It AFFORD EVERY FACILITY TO SUBSCRIBERS. ' Aug IMnl. - . ' LfPPlTT'S r, , CITY DRUG STORE, S. W.'l-IPPITT, WHOLESALE AT BETAH DRUGGIST. . SEEALER J.V r JimlS OILS .VARNISHES, ; . " ' . - " ' ; AND ' i ' iria o 7ir?o. FINE TOILET SOArS, PEEFTJMERIE3 rUTTY AJSTD ftWDOV GLASS . Patent medicines,' '- . PU RE INES AND ; LIQUOKS For Medicinal Puifottt, V COAL J.N ABBON. '' : - OIL,' v ' 3T TnB BsltRRL OR HaLF B.RRF.I OVtT 508 COAL OIL LAMPS SOW OJi HAXD ' To which we Invito the trade. - ' PHYSICIANS rRESCRIPTlONS Aocuratoly Compounded. - ' - Guodi Warranted at Reprtienled, . i -OR KO BAI.R. rt - 1 .- CITT.DRUQ STORK 1 ' OpnoAlte lb Kenran TT F" CANCER DOCTOR. , :-r J"amcis"D. Jo1tnon, , OF CLKVKI.AWD. - " "1 TTOrfjD inform all who may be afflicted with Ceaoer ,V that he Is prepared to cure test forniifisoie dis ease by a process dinVrtn? from all othsm. known only to himself, HVi treatment consists in the application, of a single plaster, composed of European hsrbs. eao Ins; little or no pain. On examination ko will h. abl. to say to the patient whother their case is eorahl.or not and will guaranty a p.rsnaneot cure of all he undertakes. Also, will frnarranto. permanent cur. in the worst osse ot RhumaUsm. HfcvURK-cxe Mrs. Samuel Nrv. Geo Kastrller. F R. Osnll. and flavid Morey. MU Vernon, O.j John Dally, OntTliurg, Knox Co.. OJiio. tlrnox At his resiiluce. Ejilford. fuvslinpa Co.. f)., 3 miles Houth oj Cleveland. ' (July 26, lid--. To Painters and Builders. TINPPF.O Oil, SiUtiUe warranted ecnal to pure J l-ionseed Oil. aud much choaper. Also Tore grouod Vt hite l.esd and Ziuo at .slav l'J, l64-ly. WARNER MILI.KR'S, Aycr's Boreaparilla .OCT 01 KB. . , ;; Had Willis Guy lord Clark written do bet tor.tl.ig than tbe following, lio would have raqVed as puo of our sweetest poet: - Solemn, yet beautiful to view, r fit Month uf my heart I thnudawnest here, With sad and faded leavea to etr-nt The summer's inelancho'y bUr. The moaning of thy winds I hear. As tht red Huniot dies afar, Aud bars of purple clouds appear, . ( ' Obscuring every western star. "Tfiou solemn month! I hoar'tby voice, It tells mr soul of other da vs. , ,-.' When but to live was to rejoice, When rth was lovelv to my nse 1 Oh tlnionn britrht--oh blHsed hours. Where are those Hrini; mpiurei not j 1 aitk mr sulrtt's wuarieu iiuwui I mk my pale and fuvured brow 1 look to Nature, and behold :. , Uy life's diip embleiuA runtllug loand, hues of criuxHon and of gold The years dead honors on the ground And slghiug with tlie winds, 1 feci, While their low pinions murmur by, How much their sweeping tones reveal Of human life and destiny, " When Spring's rieltKhtaome mnmentu ihotte, They came in seohvra from the West : Thny bore the woodlurlc's melting tone, They stirred the bluo lake's trlasny breast : Through Bummer, faliiting lu the heal, They lingered in the fort-st shade ; - ' But ohantivd and strengthened now. they beat) Iu sto ni, o'er mountain, glen an'i gJade. now like these transports of the breat-t - When life Is freab and joy ia new ; Soft as the halcyon's downy nest, And transient all ni they ate true! 1 Tbey etir Ihe leaver, iu that bright wreath. Which Hope nhnut her fi.rehfau twines, TIM tirlefs hotttighs around it bit-athe, Then Pleasure' Hp its smile returns, Alnfl for Time, and Death, and Care, What gloom around our way they fling I l.U clouds In Autumn's (rusty aii, ' The burial wtgeant of tbe Hpriug. v ' The dreams that each surcertcive year 9eemtdl)a:hcu huait tf bii(hter pride, t lstlikowitheied leaves eppear. , And sleep in darkueside by side. MiltraL How General Sickles Kcgards the Chicago Platform and McClellan. In a letter to rhilajolpbia, Gen. Sick-lef very poiutedly exposes tlie weakness tad wickedness of the copperhead party, ia its present war upon, toe Administration anJ the country. We wish every Democrat would read and digest the following paragraps which we clip from his very able, aud effective lettcT: . It is difficult, to understand why the framcrs ot the Chicago rmtiurui, tlie authors of this reproach upon our uriny and this disparagement of the martial fortitude and resources' of our country, should have chosen a distinguished offi ccr of the army to execute a schome of policy'wkiuh proposes .to subdue armed rebellion by the cessation, of hostilities against it,, and whiuh contemplates, by means oi a Convention ot the states, the reconciliation of enomies who have waged irreconciliablcwar against each other for four years. ' ' Yet inorb difficult it is for me to com prehend, except upon the supposition of an retire change ot opinions, bow it is consistent , with the fame and character of General McClellan to become the ex ponent of a party controlled by Messrs. Vallandigham, Voorhees, Long, Powell, Harris, isiglor, oeyraoui ana ood. .Gen. McClellan urged the President to enforce a. general conscription to fill up our armies. Gov. Seymour denounced Federal conscription as unconstitutional, and characterized a draft as a disastrous drain upon our populotton. ' Geo. Mp-Clellan arrested the Legislature of Mary land to prevent a meditated sot ot treas on. . , Mr. valiandigham denounces all such arrests as violations of private right and dangerous to public liberty. Gen. McClellan attributed his inability . to cross the Potomac and follow up his vio-tory M Antietam to the want of means of transportation and equipment for his army. - Senator Powell boasts that he never has voted, and never will vot, n man or a dollar for the army. Gen. Mo-Clellan declares that he"could not look his gallant comrades in tho face and tell them their labors and i aerifices had been in vain. The Chicago Convention says thoy have been iu vain, and demands aa immediate cessation of hostilities, "oecause the war has been, a failure throughout. ' Gen.'MoClellollan, rising superior 10 the despondencv which followed the Peninsular campaign, recorded this declaration in his celebrated letter of July 7, 18C2, addressed to the President from the camp at Harrison's Landing ; "Tho Constitution and the Union must be preserved, whatever may fee the cost in time, treasure or blood.'V The Chicago Convention denounces the war for the Union as an "experiment that has failed, and prescribes a Convention or "othor peacej able means," as .the limit of further re sistacce to the demands of rebel leaders. SQ, Home! that synonym for the sweetest sanotitiesl how it falls upon the heart of the homeward streaming crowd. That Ttxod boundary of peaoe that society can not encroach upon, where we can look calmly out upon the frowns of the world and our perplexed, spirit find inspiration of strength and space for rest.. . Home! where gentle- memories Meal upon us with shadows of the twilight, and forever tapestry the walls, while the voice of the music ii hushed, and" each soul within' the silent circle calchos nearer glimpse of heaven, a 'dearer .view of sweet forms and faces crone before. Happy are ttos who can turn from . the festive gayetieg oi the : world, and meet outstretched arms and loving heart in whoso affection there is no decay and no deccit--'at home" With eyes of hope and tearful rapture' we look forward to our arrival at home. And when our vital lamp burns low, and the golden bowl began to shudder, aud the silvei cord to nutwino, frt our look be opon the face, we bent love! Oh, let . die at home! Mai. Gb. Birnet died hut week in Philadelphia. lit was a ton of James (1. liifney, tho noted anti-slavery cditifr. He hsul undo a F-pTeri li J rcpnt.-.tion ( a milita'r' cl!jccr.' ' ' " ' THE KOUEOUS OF UECEL PRIS u . - . on. -'- teller from Wm. L.llarrod lo his ;Yirc-"ll0YY Le Escaycd-Sccnes In-a KcJjcl - Prison Terrible Destitution and Stanatlonlln cola Forever. Atlanta, Oa., Sept, 26th, 1861.' 'MV Deae Wue :i promisod you in my lnit letter, that I would give you a history of my capture, and prison Hi'o, while in Hood's mess. On the 2 2d of July, about two o'clock, I was "taken iu out of the wet" by tbe Johnny Rebs. Our corps was sent on the extiemo left to build a" fort, tout!- soO-Taftor we-coru-uienced workxthe' Johnnys attacked us in the roar' and flank; We'soon' got ordcrf to fall back. Tho corps scattered in every direction, aljuost, aod I fell in with a detail from ' my regimant, that was throwing up rifle-pit. near, by. . On my way back to the regimont I found four or five of the Pioneer boys, and I stopped with them for the purpose of getting them out of danger. ' At that time tho picket officers rode along and asked me to pilo up qome rails across the road to stop the progress of tho enemy. J sot the boys to work, and by the time I got it completed the rebs had got all around me, and had the D'visiou in, the same fix. I mado several strategetio movements, but failed in every one. I only had one more chance of escapo, and it was a dangerous one. In order to do that I had to. fall back from my present position, and in doing so, the cavalry made a dash and politely invited me to join Hood's mess, with a number ot revolvers drawn on me. . ;(, ',; F.,:. ; '. i I did not stop toarguo the question with them, as I had arms, and they outnumbered me fifty to one. . They soon relieved me of my haversack and canteen, then hastened 'to march mo to the rear, where they had quite a number of our boys. The first one I knew waa Capt. Bostwick. They then took us about seven miles around, and finally got us to Atlanta sometime after dark. Marched us to Hood's headquarters, and two of his imps requested our names, j They, then marched us to East Point, six miles froui" Atlanta, and by that time we were tired enough to lay down on the ground and take -a "short sleep; then daylight came, and "IP got up, shook off the loose dirt, and looked around, i tie boys reminded me of seven or-eight hundred hogs, piled up in a small pon. Well wg staid there one dayn two pights, and they started us for Ander-souvllle.. Wa.J'd-.a. wroh to Griffin, forty-five mil , thore' we took tho cars, ana reached our destination on the; 28th, just before sundown ; and as I marched in at the Large gate, 1 sunk down about five -feet Jen inchea in my shoes, and staid , there, till I marched outi.on. the" 18th of September. , t. ' - . It is called -Camp Sumtsr, enoloscd with largo hewed timbers set endways in the eround. about fifteen lofitliiKh. It contains pome twenty -five acres, aud what is termed a dead line, gome eighteen feet from the stockade which takes up some four acres, and a quagmire in the center of four acres mora, making eight acres, ; this deducted from twenty-five, loaves seventeen acres for 33,000 to camp on. I will explain what 'this dead line was for : 'it was to keep men from the stock-ado. If one of the boys would lean against it the sentinel? would shoot him. They ' itot furloughs ? for evory Yank they killed, in: that way,-not to exoeod thirty days.i Ihardly know how to de. scribe the prison ; the soil is very sandy, and there S not a spear of grae or shade iu tbe prison, and the' most of the boys stripped of their blankets, and the most of them of thoit clothing, and supplied with the rebs old lousy, ragged duda. Hundreds of them come in with nothing to eover their nakedness but an old shirt and pants, when I gay this I mean just what I say,. and nothing else-rand tbey have to lay around iu tho sand and hot snn in the daytime, aad at night lay ex posed to the bleaching dews, and in a few. days thoy have"; to meet their God in'onother and better world., While I4 waa in prison, the. average of deaths was about 135 per day. The first weok in August the loss in deaths was eleven hundred and thirty. What do you think of that?V hm told by a soldier that was": captured at. Chickamanga that one hundred and seventy-five of his regiment wore captured there, and there were only fiftoon of th";m left and another instance whore fifteen wore captund and only throe frft-awful to relate, but ,it is" trutr. Thousands of those that died weri for the-want of something to eat. As soon as they got down weak" they lost their appctitoand could not eat the grub that w-..,i1jLf.i.i!T-;fliori irt font i. torn, r M lit wai IssUol-.them, in fact it. Was tot fit for a hog,to eat; nothing but starvation would induce a buinan eat it. .: (Jur food consisted of corn bread mads of unsifted meal. In place ot- bread we got one half pint of corn' meal, sometime half a pint of rico, and half a pint of nigger peas halt eat up with bugs ; and sdinetiuiei they . cooked . them shucks bugs and dirt together, and issued a piut lo a man, fiai would always sour before we'got thenu,.. Sometimes we got a little molasses ; sometimes a little meat, pork or' beef- pork about one mouthful, beef about three. We. hardly ever got more than two of tn tse articles in one day, and very often didn't get any never cot enough for mora than one meal per day, Mt.A raWtlAH T 0 1 ' iVsCtf fl- A n tj-i OUU OtUa TAMVlsl WAA kssttW sW.lrV'4 U U eat it. At general thing the pork oould walk with maggots. And iometimes the beef was so rotten we didn't have to cook it. A ratiou of wool for three days was a stick about half as large as your arm. MfUY. 1 thou"bt I had seen hard sitrhts, but I never saw an) thing to compare with Camp Samtcr. 1 have seen hunuredri of our brave boys lay irt tbe hot sun, unable to r.iiao t'.icir lie dtor brush tho flies from their f oo , and dia without a fiiend to bo'p tlifni -to fiRythin. : As soon as a mar. t.l-J fivk bs 3 -Litked (tit J'rooi u.ndr his blanket tadio, -e haljfVl lose alf fetliiag toward tuoir felWf-au j j alter they are iu pnMttl a short time. could hot help any duly those belonging . ... .. ... 1 17 V .. . 1 .... ' to my regiment; wniijn i viturea every day.- If they did got "sick we Jlad nothing to ive tUeiri, or-oVer theTr naked-ness, e principle disease is scurvy and Btaiitttion. The thba commenced mying the prisoners from Andersojville about the first of September, to fsome point unknown .to us at that timer; they told us to Charleston, for a general exchange. On the evening of the 17th the glad tidings oame that two' thousand of Khormarrt men wore to be exchanged at JVtlitnt.t.Jt ooutmjo! pre-,4'''f.'7u;nt. On the evoniog ot the loth we had or ders to full in aod march to the car,,! which we did without hesitation. We soon got to Sherman's mess, and found it a better place to board thin Hood s sswss' was, I never saw tho army look better than it does at the present timo. J was sorry to find on my return that some o'f my associates were no more. Jiut suoh is the fate .of war. . I don't know how soon wo will enter on adother campaign I want you to cot some good cloth and make me two or three good shirts ; those wc-draw are too small. Uncln.'Sam is going; to give us prisoners a suit oi clothes tree ol charge. He is a good old lollow ain t he r I must close for the present My health is improving.' Hoping this will find you and the rest of the family in good health, L remain, , .Yours truly, - - ' ' , William L. IIarrod P. S.. Down with "Little Mao" and up with Father Abraham 1 that is what's the matter, Give my respects to all tho Union men, aud tell the- copperheads l despise them. - . "'i W, L. . II ; Vbrt Natural. In the "Little Country Girl"-in the Atlantic for August, the fading wasting Emily, who had eutlercd her lno long and was about de parting for the land of spirits, is made to say ; "I suppose you think," e.aid she at last, in a low, sweet voice, "thut it is easy for a sick girl to go. Hut 1 love every thing I've been lookinjr nt. It my be more beautiful thero. but it will not be the same: I shall want to see exaotly this stretch of water and the Islands beyond, and the shadows on those woods away off in the distance, and the field where lather has mowed the gross , for bo many years. Every summer, as soon as June came in, I've listened, early in the morning, before noise began;., to hear tho whetting ofthe soytho, and .then waited for the smell of the hay to came in at the operi.'winduw.' Those maples,- .on tho knoll, are very dear friends! I've boon glad with, thetd in the 'Spring," aud serry with them in t'e Fall,'throujh all these, years. The birds and the dandelions "are all my friends- I've waited for them every year, and it .eenied as if the same one came back. You well people .can't understand it. They ere near to me. I enter into the life ol each one of them, just as you do into the Jives of vour hu: man frionds. Spirits go everywhere,' see everything. -That will be too much. I'm attached to just this spot'of earth. And then I'm attachod to myself. I can't realize that I shall be tho same, and I don't : wautto give! myself up, poor miserable creature a-1 am." w' '.".'. : ' ' We put it to the fhoughtful reader ifJ that is not very natun l, and very well put, wnetner anytmng evor occurred like it or Lot. It will do to think about and dream over. - The Successful Car.dlda.cs In Indiana.I The following are the State officers (all Union) elected in Indiana Jast Tuesday, by a majority approximating 24,09C; - Governor . ......... -Oliver P. Morton. Lieut. Governor, . , .Conrad Baker. . . Seo. State .......... Nelson Trjisler, - Auditor. . i . ... ... ..Thomas M'Carthy. Treasurer . i . . .' ..John L. Morrison Attorney General . . . .D. E. Williamson; -The successful candidates for Congress ore as follows; those marked with a star being members of the present Congress: ' I C. M. Allea, Union . II Michael C. Kar, Dein. . -;v III Ralph Hill," Uuion. . , - ; IV J. II. Earauhar,' Union. t; V George W. Julian, Union. . ; VI Ebeiicr Dumont, Uniotis VII H. D:'Washbuihe Union, prob. VIII GodIove S. Ortrr,-Uniou.r IX Suhuyler Colfux, Union. X Joseph -8. Defrees, Union. . , ' XI Thomas N. Stilwell, Union. , Jefp. Davis In hia Augusta speech said: ' ' ' " " : - '- "We must beat SHERMAN) we must march into Tenhossee, thore we will draw 20,000 to 80,000 men to our standard, and so strengthened we must pufh the enemy back to the banks of the Ohio, and tTiut give the peace party of tht North an accretion no puny editorial can give." Ifaus "the rebels nf the South and the peaoe party of tba North base" all their hopes upon Union disaster. t Beat 8uer-UA.v; slaughter the Union armies; march over the dead bodies of Union soldiers; wade through seas of Union blood, to the Ohio river, aod aid thft peace party of the North! iayl Jeff. Davis. Let the Union armies be defeated, and McClellan. can be eleotdd, oays the rebel peace party of the North. . l)o you discover any difference in the principles and aims ,of the fi-hting rebels of the South and therym-patbiziu,; rebola ofthe North? Gazette. ' . , vjr,Printprs' errors are sometime very laughable. A youug' clergyman printed a sermon, the subject of whioh was the net ewitv for moderate and rational recro'- alion. in. which ocenrred the passage, Men should vrork -aud play too." The Want of a stroke ruiucd it, and the re!i;-loin world nj scandaliz.d by - reading, 'Mn ihfnl!d work aad plat loo.", y . JudRC Holt'g Kcport OH the SCCrCt VJU'VOlUtlOIiarj ASSOClatiOQ lU lllO LI. W e$I. v ,. . y "The large Dnily paphrs, the past week, huw.econtainod the report of Judge Holt, of Kf.t the Judgo Advocate General of the Uuitod Statesmen the recent dcvelop- Imcjjjs as to the exiBttfoco of secret trea- (onauij societies in tho -tycjtern btates-The docunieut is Very -lougj- and would fill a sheet like ours. But it ia vory able and conclusive, and establishes iSBfuc't of the treasonable cliaiuetni o(-tVffiiC' trials in luu.aaa, and the oscapo of Dodd, the head of the order in that State, -whilo his case wasjiendihg, and tho testimony ofsucli a eitaractcr as to convict him of treason; a(e all odnclusive evidences of the guilt of theso assouTatians. : We Lava. not room to publish Judge Holt", report, but we copy from the N. Y. . Tribune a sumniiug up of the facts . as established by it. . . There has been no such formi dable a conspiracy in modem times, but it is exposed, and. the leaders are marked men for all future time. Thero can be no dou'it that the Democratic loaders organized,' in at least fifteen States, a vast, oath-bound conspiracy: 1. To incite soldiers to desert from the armies, and to harbor and proteot :' deserters: II. To discourage enlistments and resist the draft: III. Tocircate disloyal and treasonable publications: IV, To communicate with and impart intelligence to the enemy: ; V. To aid the enemy by recruiting for them, or assisting them to rocruit within our lines: VI. To furnish the enemy with munitions of war: VII. To cooperate with the Rebels in thoir invasions of loyal States: .VIII. To de stri.y the military stores and property of l,x l)V,)...l rt.; tv m Tinate, and get out of the way, Union cit lufli'suiiiuiuuiuiij-iijui; Av. AOHHaas- izens obnoxious lor their zeal, and Union soldieri and Government employoos: X. lo persecute and oppress, or drive off, l mon citizens, and destroy their proper ty: XI. To establish a North Western Confederacy of Btates, to be torn by force of arms from the Federal Union. At the head of this picantio conspiracy stands Valiandigham. And who is. Val-landighaift' The soul ofthe Chicago Convention the mover of McPJellati's nomination as the Dcmocratio candidate! for the PreaidoDCj tUa hadine stumn advocate in the West of MoClellan's eleo. tion. Through tho wmle body, of ..tie conspiracy, in overy one of the State, cursed with its poisonous prosenod, work autivoly and mischievously ; prominent Jjemocrats, recognized and following as the leaders of thoir party in tho localities here thoy live. - : . . ..- IN THE AlII ANO DID IE VIIT SI I,'' With, a very few'cuta and thrusts. Gen. Logan madd shreds of the last of the res olution lies in tho Chicago -Platform: " the sympathy of the Democracy is heart ily and earnestly extended to the soldiers of tho Army and tbe seaman ofthe Navy." lie said: - In what way da they sympathize with us? By resolutions that the army is o noble bund of patriots, that the war has been successful, and, they are -proud of the army? No, sir. . Thay say the wris a failure.. Do they congratulate us because we have planted our flag lu every Southern 8tatb? They say we did no bucq thing. ."Do they' 'sympathiaa with the widows and orphans of those men slain in battle? Not with one'of them. Ia it by ever visiting the" army' and associating with the soldiers and officers? If-bo I have failed to' seo theiu.T T tcaiil any man to tell me when Pendleton, Valiandigham, except the timet he wag tent through the lines, orjfbod, or Ryiidert, or BtU nwiit, or Richmond, orJRobinion, or Allen, or any of lw rest of them, hate ever tome to tee the army and take the hand of the toldicrt. ' Not one of thenvvr came to see tutinoe the war began, after we passed south of Cairo. I have met other men there; men from Indiana, Illinois, and all the Western States. 1 1 speak now ofthe leaders. I have seen Governors; I have seen half of a legislature come and talk to the toys; and see that they were :ared for, but not of that party. I am willing to sell out my interest in their sympathy for a very small price. , - ' . t ' -'" 7 Easily Satisfied. " A Dutchman and hls'intcndod appeared before a newly installod Dutch squire., to be married. Bidding them join hands the squire began: ' ! -; . "Haas, ditsh yoa lofe this woman bo mootcb as yon can?" ; ' , .' ; . -, ' Yaw'" replied llabj. . , v , "Katerine, dosh you lofo Ilaos so mootch as you-can?", No,";promptly replied Katerine. '-Dosh' you lofe him enuflf to marry him?" . ; I'" - ' . . "Yaw," replied Katerine. ' ' "Veil, den, I brononnoe yon man and woniang." - ' '. . Huns asked the charge. " "Oh! nnting, noting," replied the qu.ire, "if you ishsati.hfiod I ish ttoa'l ' -'sn ,,-. . .-- J ' ." .t tST:We clip the following odd conceit from thoN. Y. Tribune : . Unionist to Cbpperheaca la Bangor : '.MoClollaa can not be' elooted.' It is o impossible to elect him as to turn back the waters of the Kennobo and make thourfiow up tho dara. Nothing short of Almighty power can .po change the hearts ofthe North as to induee them to yiold in this struggle; and, unfortunately tor the Copperheads, God ii not flu their sido."-'- - .' Soldier proud of his one lotr, proud of hisoliovronsof honorable service, proud of his country, proud of his politics cut- tin" in: "TJo, find llo ennnot bo on their gida-whi-fi ll-i maintains hia preent re fyactabimy." ... , Solomon CTunoEs,wollkiiown in tho Muskingum valley aa one of our moat " active and successful business men'," died at Zanesvillo a short time t-ince. Ho was sixty-eight years of sgei lie had acquired an imnteuse property. Vm someears he had resided in Chicago, where bis business energy was tho the mo of general remark. Ha was a very on-, thusiaatio XJnioa uian, and contributed liberally to the good cause. ,'. : " . . -r"TT r. ..... . " . Lr- cauaUian provinces ave agreed upon a plan for a contodorition for homo purposes. There is to be a sort of Con gre) with JrOo'alaturo ia each provinc. But all these things remain to be sane--tioned, or annulled by the British Gov ernmlint. -' Gov. Uaiin, has- bciiI hi juossago. to tho Legislature tt Louisiana, . wherein he discusses the local matters of interest.--. The Legisktaro oa tho lQh inst., elected R. K Cutler, and Clunks Smitli, U. S. Senators.' , ''.'' . Ejr John A. Dix said:. "If any .maa hauls down the American flog si oot him on the spot." Geo. B. McClellan said: ' "If any man hauls' down the American '.flag, ex- haust the resources of statesmanship" to induce him to haul it up again. Montgomery Blair was osptured by i the guerrillas, from a train near Lexing- i ton last week, but escaped from them.., t He proceeded to. Lexington and tuado & strong Union speech. - . , 23" The total amount of National Bank circulation. issued to October StU, la $53,515,-..' 730. Theamoqnt isstied for the week end-' ing Saturday, October 15th, inclusive, is $1,-' 861,200." Total amount to date, 155,676,730. , .,- r- . v x ) IjuK stables of the Brighton trotting course, near Boston, were burnt last week, . and twenty-threo valuable horses, ome of,, them noted for thoir speed were eonsura- '-med. - " ' ffSyAn editor having road in anothw, paper that the use ot a certain kind of 1-tobacco, if a man sniokeaor chews, will ' make him forget that ho owes a dollar in ' the world, innceeatly ; concludes that r many of his subscribers have boon fur-. nished wit) tbe. article, ..... .... v.. , '.',. - XQrrHIVATit JvDOJII-NTI-f MATTERS op Faitu. It is a preposterous' thing . that men -can venture their souls where 1 they will not venture their money; for ' they will take their religion npon trust, ? but not trust a synod about the goodness- . of half a crown. William Penn. - v , BS!.The Richmond Whig says tha rcbels are now havinsr their-"annual 1 streak of bad luck.M. When they eel ' whipped it is all oaiag to bad luck, but ; when thoy whip us it is the result of their 1 indomitabla valor, of course. i,' . U3u A minister travelling through tha.' West, ' some yearj ftsro. asked a ladv on whom he called, what fho thought of tha ' doctrine of total 'depravity. "Oh," she J replied, "I think it is a good doctrine, if ' tne people would only live up to it. . ' t . tsaThe Oxford Democrat tells of an old lady i i i Lowoll widow of Hannah ' Andrews -who has reared thirteen ohild-.- rea, and ha . i ic6 hundred thirty five f"-1 tcenda'ntsi' CVerily, she hat -done whal k she could. ' -i ' - i . ; r ' 1 tryA lady in a predicainent--crcuising the street, the mud ankle deep, the rain pouring down, her ' umbrella - turned by" the wind, and her hat blown off into a mud puddle. " - ' - - 1 i : ' " ' V.- - -. "' ,i ': JKiTThere exists a singular domestio fashion in Duchen, Germany. There the "unterrocW (ohemise), ol tha women' will often be hauded down and worn, for three generations. k ' : r, . The question is often discussed. ' whettcr t.ie savages enjoy life. We sup-' pose tbey do, as they alwayi seem anxious, to take it when thoy get a chance. ' ; Stubbs said to one of his debtor. "Isn't it about time that you paid ma that little bill?" 'My dear sir" was tha--consoling reply, "it's not a question .of time, it'B a question of money. ' , 8irTi."Paddy," said a wsir, "your ears are too long." "Divilabit ov ' thrubbla does that give roc, but yours are too short altoithcr for the brayiug baste that yeca be" ;. V - -. . . 8l"She isn't all that fanoy painted her," bitterly exclaimq a rejected loverr aud, worse .than that, aho inn t all tbat she paints her&elf. - , , , tSTA Salem machinist has invented an' automaton that will smoke a cigar jmit at . patural as anybody. Every raokr ehould cava one. '.'.,,,. Secretary ftantoa baa gone to tl L.rmy of the Tolomac, with a view to ob. tuning information upon which to base his estimates for the onsuifjg year. ' Fkance gives assurance tbat tha rebel p privat-een building iS her porti (hill not be allowed tj Bail, . : i - Da. Bkllotvs has roturnod from Calii forn:a with $200,000 in gold for the Saul- taryCoraraisaion. . . v ' .sf The voting of the Ohio soUiors In tbj army of the Potomac stands about Id 'Onion to I Pcraocrat'. . . ' t.The you:ig geiitleiiun who fi '.W ii" to a p.3. i.n has had liis win;;s cl;n- '. s!rf:n:iiAV and -fi. ,'tt o-ft-n- ) : '"